Post #150952
August 16, 2020, 10:50:57 PM
Alright, so let me go into depth about this bill.
First off, it entirely and completely conflates a Constitutional Amendment and a Statutory Law Amendment which is something that I have considered to be entirely bad form for years, and has been adopted by the Storting without issue as an exceptionally bad idea, and that the laws must be separated. Even our Omnibus Correction Acts have not mixed Statutory with Constitutional Law -- the only author who has ever done that and for some reason believes it to be a good idea is Dawsinian. The reason this is bad is because it then creates questions of IF certain parts of the law are then, entrenched into the Fundamental Laws and thus require constitutional Amendment to change. Furthermore, it leads to additional issues of where to look for such Amendments and changes to a specific law -- making access to law more complicated.
Next, the bill replaces the entire text of the Judicial Offices Act. I don't think I need to entirely state why this is a bad thing. If the entire text of an act is changed, then amending a prior statute is not the correct course of action, as it effectively makes it impossible to follow the changes (even somewhat) and just replaces the act outright, instead of a new act that repeals the prior one, thus making clear the legislative history and intent. No such amendments have taken place in Wintreath History, and for good reason, and again makes clear why this bill should not be adopted.
Furthermore, in the act amending the Constitution it removes the section on appeals -- but instead adds in prohibition onto the Speaker, Chairperson, and Monarch from serving on Panels in the Fundamental Laws while codifying the appeals into Statutory Law. Therefore, if the mechanism for appeals changes then the restrictions on serving within the Fundamental Laws becomes confused and an artifact of history that only adds complexity into the laws and requires additional explanation. While I do not, fundamentally, object to the moving of the Appeals away from the Fundamental Laws and into Statutory Law, I do object to enshrining restrictions into the Fundamental Laws for reasons supplied in Statutory Law that may amended easily and may quickly become outdated.
Finally, there is the fact that this merely makes our justice system generic and like every other system in existence throughout NS. While this is not, necessarily a bad thing, it fails to bring any particular innovation or change, or take advantage of the unique Wintrean System of Justice that we have -- namely that we have no standing Court. While this is not necessarily bad, I do believe that the typical NS system of courts and justice can be improved greatly and we should avoid implementing what is generally not the most effective system.